Effective treatment of acute hyperkalaemia in childhood by short-term infusion of salbutamol.

  • Markus J. Kemper
  • E Harps
  • H H Hellwege
  • D E Müller-Wiefel

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Abstract

Hyperkalaemia is a life-threatening emergency and infusion of glucose with insulin has so far been regarded as the standard treatment of choice. Recently the beta-2 stimulatory drug salbutamol has been shown to be an effective agent to treat hyperkalaemia by inducing a shift of potassium into the intracellular compartment. We treated 15 children aged 0.1-14 (mean 5.2) years suffering from acute hyperkalaemia (mean level 6.6 +/- 0.54, range 5.9-7.7 mmol/l) with a single infusion of salbutamol (5 micrograms/kg over 15 min). Serum potassium concentrations decreased significantly within 30 min to levels of 5.74 +/- 0.53 and 4.92 +/- 0.53 mmol/l after 120 min (P < 0.001, respectively). No side-effects occurred other than a light increase in heart rate in 3 patients.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number6
ISSN0340-6199
Publication statusPublished - 1996
pubmed 8789768